Saturday, July 30, 2016

Paperback sales of my novel end after tomorrow. Call it "indefinite hiatus."

It’s really difficult to get people to buy your wares. It's easier to get people to donate. I've had people donate a lot of money to Baldilocks and, don’t get me wrong—I’m very
grateful for it and won’t turn it down…and you do get something for those donation: keeping
my blogging afloat.

But, I’d rather get paid for something I’ve finished creating. It feels
better. I'd like to sell 20 today and 20 tomorrow. Then, I will be done with selling that particular book for a while, at least online.

Also, there has to be someone out there looking for a novel
on which to base a screenplay. Certainly there is.

Saturday, July 16, 2016

It is NASA astronaut Leland Melvin and, like most others, I’m
charmed by his love for his furry family and their love for him.

But, after reading Melvin’s biography, I’m struck by
something else. He went to college on an athletic scholarship—football—but he
did not take the easy route while there. His undergraduate degree is in
chemistry.

Melvin was drafted in the NFL, but chronic injuries ended
that career. But he had another avenue available to him, which resulted
in his being a crew member of two missions of the Space Shuttle Atlantis.

There are several reasons that Mr. Melvin’s story fascinates
me, but I want to mention just one.

On the cover of my novel, Tale of the Tigers, you see three
people: the main characters, Kevin and Felice, and a third person: Malik. Malik
is probably my favorite creation, but I didn’t just conjure his personality and
persona out of thin air or wishful thinking. I made him athletic, handsome, and
brilliant because I have known many black men like him. Men who are gifted
physically, but most importantly, intellectually. They are black, but they aren’t
the sort of black men who are featured in the news. They aren’t “news” because
they are good men who are content to use the gifts which God gave them to thrive in the greatest
country available to people of all races, with the gifts being interior rather
than exterior.

I’m always fascinated by black people who become well-known
outside of something intrinsic to race.[i]
I suppose that’s an irony, but it’s true.

[i]When
I used to watch Fox News, I used to love seeing Neil Tyson deGrasse for this
reason. Sadly, he has ruined that for me of late.